Nest decoration: birds exploit a fear of feathers to guard their nest from usurpation

Many species of birds incorporate feathers into their nest as structural support and to insulate the eggs or offspring. Here, we investigated the novel idea that birds reduce the risk of nest usurpation by decorating it with feathers to trigger a fear response in their rivals. We let prospecting bir...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inRoyal Society open science Vol. 8; no. 11; p. 211579
Main Authors Slagsvold, Tore, Wiebe, Karen L
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England The Royal Society Publishing 01.11.2021
The Royal Society
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Summary:Many species of birds incorporate feathers into their nest as structural support and to insulate the eggs or offspring. Here, we investigated the novel idea that birds reduce the risk of nest usurpation by decorating it with feathers to trigger a fear response in their rivals. We let prospecting birds choose between a dyad of nest-boxes in the wild, both containing some nest materials, but where one had a few white feathers and the other had none. All three species of cavity-nesting birds studied, the pied flycatcher , the blue tit , and the tree swallow , hesitated to enter boxes with white feathers. A similar avoidance of white feathers was found when the alternative nest-box of a dyad held black feathers. However, the birds readily collected white feathers that we placed in front of their nest-box, showing the fear of such feathers was context-dependent. We suggest that naive prospecting birds may perceive feathers in nests as the result of a predation event, and that owners decorate nests with bright feathers that can be seen from the opening to deter others from entering.
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Electronic supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5701970.
ISSN:2054-5703
2054-5703
DOI:10.1098/rsos.211579